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Sagot :
Answer:
I'll throw my own garbage to the right trash can and seperate it by its type
Answer:
5 WAYS TO REDUCE GARBAGE AS A STUDENT
Step-by-step explanation:
1. Conduct a Waste Audit.
Schedule a week where you track every piece of garbage you produce. Ask students to only use the classroom garbage for the week. Ask the school janitor not to remove anything from your classroom. Bring in a giant sheet of plastic and rubber gloves or a plastic grabber. On Wednesday and Friday, take your trash cans outside and empty them onto the sheet of plastic. Sort through the garbage and record every item that has been thrown out. You’ll all be grossed out by the contents, which will motivate everyone to take the reduction of waste seriously. The following week go through the items on your list and discuss alternative methods for dealing with them.
2. No waste lunches.
In the US organics are the second largest component of landfills, which are the biggest producers of methane gas. 30-40% of the food is wasted. This is the equivalent of 20 lbs of food per person each month. How much of that is wasted at school? It is estimated that each student wastes about 67 lbs of lunch food each school year. Encourage students to pack their own lunches to ensure that they are bringing only food they will eat. In addition to considering the food, take stock of how lunches are packed. Encourage students to use reusable containers for their sandwiches and snacks.
3. Set up a compost.
There is always going to be some part of a lunch that doesn’t make it into your students’ stomachs—an apple core or peach pit, that sandwich that got dropped in the dirt. That is where a compost comes in handy. You can use the soil you produce for the school property, or you can donate it to a local garden. If you are unable to set up a compost outside, vermicomposting, which is composting with red wiggler worms, works well indoors.
4. Use less paper.
Reducing what you use of any product is going to reduce waste, but paper is a big one for schools, and for North America in general. In the US each person uses about 660 lbs of paper per year. Fortunately, there are many ways to use less paper in the classroom. You can print double-sided and use scrap paper for notes. Keep a bin in the classroom for paper that has only been used on one side, and encourage students to use it.
5. Make recycled paper.
By now most of North America has paper-recycling programs, but you can also recycle paper in the classroom. It’s a fun project, and the textured paper is perfect for making cards and crafting simple boxes.
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